Who the hell is this guy?
Chapter 7
John
“Hey, John…” Stephanie Gomez sidles over and nestles her little body beneath my arm. “After this round, how about you take me outside for a little fresh air?”
I glance down at her blonde head. She’s got her sizable cleavage pressed against me so hard I can almost feel the nipple rings digging into my chest through her dress. I nod, opening my mouth to deliver a nice yes, ma’am but something makes me pause.
“No, thanks, Stephanie,” I say instead, pinching a ping pong ball between my fingers. “Maybe some other time.”
I toss the ball across the table and it dances along the rim before finally plunking into the cup.
Grant frowns with annoyance as he grabs the cup and drinks it down.
“Are you sure?” Stephanie whispers at me, her voice barely carrying over the party around us. She licks her lips as bait, but my boxers don’t feel the least bit tighter.
“I’m sure.”
She rolls her big eyes. “Whatever.”
Without another word, she stumbles off through the house. I don’t feel too badly about it. She’s Stephanie Gomez; the sorority girl version of John Kirby. She’ll find another guy to entertain herself with tonight. Always does.
I toss a second ball toward Grant’s cups, but it bounces off the table down to the floor. He lets it tumble away, staring back at me with a cocked brow.
“What?” I ask.
“Nothing.” He smiles. “That’s only the third girl tonight you’ve brushed off. That’s all.”
“You’re keeping track?”
“This is my house.” He grins. “I know everything that happens here.”
I chuckle, glancing around. This used to be Junior Morgan’s place before he moved out to live with Eliza. Now, his former roommate, Ty, picked up a new roomie of his own — the illustrious Grant. Not exactly the couple I ever expected but they’re just about as perfect for each other as Junior and Eliza are.
“So, what if I have?” I shrug.
“So…” He grabs a ball and takes aim at the cups in front of me. “You have a girlfriend.”
“I don’t have a girlfriend.”
“Then, you have a girl you’d like to befriend.” He flicks his wrist, firing the ball directly into my cup with a hard splash. “Boo-yah!”
“What the hell do you know?” I swallow the drink down with a hard gulp.
He grins. “You went on the defense real fast there, Johnny. Want to try that one again?”
“Don’t call me Johnny.” I watch as he lines up a second shot, his eyes squinting behind perfectly trimmed blond bangs. “I guess my focus is a little pointed, at the moment.”
“No shit.” Grant tosses the ball, once again landing it directly in one of my cups. “I heard about your little trifecta challenge.”
I drink it down. “You’re one gossipy bitch, Grant.”
“And you’re falling behind the competition.”
I glance around for Douglas, just in case. “How so?”
“Word in the quad says Dougie’s already two out of three.”
Dammit.
“Are you sure?” I ask.
He shrugs. “I never assume you guys get as much tail as you claim to. I’m just passing on what I heard. Apparently, he just needs a teacher.”
“The teacher is the hardest one,” I point out. “I’m this close on that myself. Once I’m done, the other two are cake.”
“If you say so.” He grabs another ball and throws it without even aiming and it still pops directly into my cup. “And that’s game.”
“Your talents are wasted on that theatre degree, Grant,” I say, picking up the cup.
“Oh, please.” He smirks. “I’ve played with more balls than you have.”
I laugh. “You’re definitely right about that.”
He abandons the table. “Speaking of which, I’m going to go find Ty.”
“TMI, dude.”
“Deal with it, Johnny. Good luck at the game tomorrow.”
“Thanks.” I grit my teeth, but I let it slide as I choke down the last cup of beer.
I smash the plastic cup in my fingers and throw it toward the slumped over trash bag in the corner as my mind instantly focuses on Rose again.
That look on her face earlier was perfect. Such a delightful mix of intrigue and confusion. I can’t stop replaying the way her brow furrowed and her little button nose twitched. There’s no doubt in my mind it got her attention but there’s only one way to know for sure.
I reach into my pocket for my phone. I have to get Rose alone. It’s the only way to read her body language. In public, she’s stiff and professional — completely different from girls like Stephanie Gomez. She’ll never loosen up with me unless it’s just the two of us.
I tap out an email. Short, sweet, and to the point.
Hello, Ms. Hawthorne. I could use some extra tutoring for class.
Can we set up a time to meet on campus this week?
Johnny
My finger hovers over the send button but I don’t push it. First, I delete Johnny and replace it with John. Johnny might be a little too informal and I don’t want to spook her again too quickly.
I send the email as I step outside onto the front porch. It’s a dirty trick, I’ll admit. If she doesn’t meet with me, then she’s a horrible teacher abandoning her student. But if she says yes, then she’s potentially inviting trouble over with a capital T. I don’t feel great about it but if Grant is right and Douglas is already two for three, then I have to pick up my pace.
I check the time. It’s only ten on a Friday night. There’s still plenty of time for me to go back inside and find a young, deserving freshman to take home with me and I’ll be one for three.
My phone chimes with a new email and I rush to swipe it open.
Sure, John. Come by the TA office after class on Monday.
Bring your notes!
Ms. Hawthorne
“Yes…” I whisper.
“Heading home already, Kirby?”
I look up to see Douglas leaning against the banister surrounding the porch with a head full of blonde hair softly sucking his neck. For a second, a burst of anger surges through me as I see Rose in his thick arms, but I quickly realize that it’s just Stephanie. I guess she found her plaything for the night.
“Yep.” I nod.
He smirks. “Too bad.”
“Yeah, too bad.” I turn away from them and thump down the porch. “See you at the game.”
“Bye-bye, John.” Stephanie giggles.
I wave without looking back, still a little twisted up about that mental image. Not that I have anything to worry about, though. There’s no way Rose would ever be involved with a guy like Douglas Floyd. He’s arrogant and rude. Vulgar and loud. Kind of like…
Me, I guess.
Chapter 8
Rose
“Ooo! Ms. Hawthorne,” Daisy reads. “So official!”
I stare down at the football game from my seat on the bleachers. “Shut up,” I laugh into the phone, pressing it a little harder into my ear to hear her over the screaming sports fans. “Just decipher the email, please.”
“I don’t think I need to, Rose,” she says. “It’s pretty obvious what’s happening here.”
I wince. “Yeah, I was afraid of that.”
“Still going to meet with him?”
“I have to,” I say. “As an educator, I have to give him the benefit of the doubt.”
“And I would totally agree with you if the guy hadn’t already tried to slip you his banana.”
“I’ll keep it professional and we’ll stay on topic the entire time. If he tries to steer the conversation toward anything other than covalent bonds, I will stop him and set boundaries. You know? Real talk.”
“… Or you could just bang him.”
I roll my eyes, ignoring the comment until my gaze falls on a familiar face a few rows away. He’s weari
ng a baseball cap, one that shadows the majority of his face, but I’ve known the man since I was eighteen and I’d recognize that jaw just about anywhere.
Dr. Zach leans a little closer to the girl sitting beside him, obviously whispering into her ear and her shoulders twitch with giggles beneath a mane of styled, blonde hair. Even from back here, I can tell she’s young — younger than me, even. I don’t recognize her, but I certainly recognize the Greek letters printed on the back of her shirt.
She’s a student.
“Rose, you still there?”
I blink, pulling my eyes away from them and back to the field. “Yeah, I’m here.”
“Dammit.” She sighs. “I thought maybe you’d actually gone and done it.”
“Nope.”
“Wuss.”
The crowd ignites with applause and I look to the field in time to see John burst through the defensive line with the football cradled in his elbow. I gasp, watching with glee as he easily rushes down the field, leaving everyone else behind to score a well-earned touchdown.
“Woo-hoo!” I shout, clapping my hands with the rest of my peers.
The crowd chants his name and John takes notice. He does a little dance in response and the ladies around me scream even louder for him.
“Just think, Rose,” Daisy teases. “That could be your end zone.”
I grunt. “Stop that.”
“Sorry. It’s kind of hard to stop once I get going…”
I watch him dance a little longer before he’s forced to stop and resume the game. My smile stretches wider, reacting to his silliness and I think of his profile. John Kirby is a strange one, that much is obvious. I thought I had him figured out, but now, I’m not sure what to think of him.
I’m more tempted than ever but I’m not about to tell Daisy that.
I look toward Dr. Zach again and pause, realizing that he’s gone… along with that girl he was with.
Definitely tempted.
Chapter 9
John
She’s nervous.
Rose didn’t even glance at me the entire lecture today. Her eyes would scan the room, as she always does, but right before they’d finally hit me in the front row, they’d veer off in the opposite direction as if one look would turn her to stone.
Then, right after she dismissed us, she bolted out the door before anyone else could. She usually sticks around in case someone has questions.
So, she’s nervous, and the only possible explanation I can think of is our little tutoring session.
I’d be lying if I said this didn’t excite me a little.
I step off the elevator onto the fourth floor, right down the hall from the TA office. The door is open; I can already hear the gentle sounds of keys tapping through the silent corridor. I slow down my stride, nearly halting before peeking around the door frame inside.
Rose sits at the desk, her eyes squinting at the monitor through those adorable glasses and I admire her for a few moments before knocking on the open door.
“Hey, Ms. Hawthorne.”
She glances up and smiles. “John, come on in.”
Her posture is stiff. Knees crossed. Even her voice sounds stilted and rehearsed, like a damn secretary. She’s obviously determined to keep this meeting as professional as possible… and that turns me on a little more.
I reach for the doorknob to close it and she raises her hand to stop me.
“Can you leave that open?” she asks. “It can get pretty warm in here. No windows or anything…”
“Sure.” I let my fingers slide off the door and I sit down in the chair across from her. It squeaks loudly as I lean back and one of the four legs wobble beneath my weight. The science department must pawn whatever broken equipment they have onto the poor TAs. Even the computer looks about ten years outdated.
“So…” She folds her hands on her lap. “What exactly do you need help with?”
I chuckle. “Honestly, it’d be easier to list off what I don’t need help with.”
“Oh, it can’t be that bad,” she says, smiling. “You aced your quiz last week, so you must be following the basics, at least.”
“I aced it? Really?” I feign a little surprise. “That’s awesome.”
She reaches for the textbook on the desk. “We’ve already gone over Atomic Theory one-on-one, so you should have that down.”
“I do.” I nod. “Atoms. Very tiny.”
“And you didn’t have trouble identifying the parts of the nucleus or their charges…”
I stare across the desk at her, finding myself completely entranced. She obviously loves teaching this stuff. Her voice steadies the more she speaks, abandoning any nervous edge she had before but she still avoids looking me directly in the eye for longer than a second.
“Is it coming easier?” I ask her.
She pauses. “Excuse me?”
‘Teaching.” I smile. “You don’t seem nearly as pink up there anymore.”
“Oh…” She fidgets in her chair. “Yeah, it’s getting easier.”
“I can tell.”
Her throat clears as she flips through the textbook. “Okay, so—”
A ringtone calls out from her bag and her cheeks turn red at the sudden 90’s pop song invading the tiny room.
“Sorry—” she says, reaching into her bag and silencing it.
“You can take that if you need to.”
“No, I’ll call her back later.”
“Her who?”
She hesitates. “My sister.”
“You have a sister?” I ask. “Older or younger?”
Her fingers twitch and she slides the textbook off the desk onto her lap. “Younger… by about three minutes.”
I raise a brow, genuinely interested in the idea that two versions of her exist in this world. “You have a twin?”
“Yep.” She nods. “Let’s try and stay on topic, John. I’m sure you have other classes to prepare for…”
I lean back in the shrieking chair. “No, actually. I’m wide open today.”
She holds her breath as she skims the book in her lap. “How about Stoichiometry? Would you say you have a firm grasp on that?”
“Are you all right, Ms. Hawthorne?” I ask. “You seem stressed.”
“I’m fine,” she says, looking down to hide the blood invading her cheeks. She must like it when I call her that.
“Are you getting enough cardio? A little bit of exercise three times a week significantly reduces stress—”
“John…” Rose closes her textbook and sets it back onto the desk. “What are you really doing here?”
I shrug. “I need extra help in Chemistry.”
“I really don’t think you do,” she says, staring at me. “In fact, I think you’re following the lectures just fine and one glance at your transcripts proves that.”
I bite my cheek. “You checked my transcripts?”
“You’re in the top two percent of your graduating class,” she says. “You have a 3.98 GPA. With grades like yours, you’re the one that should be tutoring.”
I lean forward and flash a wink, grasping at any hope I have of turning this moment around. “I’d be down for some role-playing if you’re into that kind of thing...”
She fights her smile. “John, come on. Don’t play dumb.”
“I’m not.”
“You have a natural gift,” she argues. “And, if you ask me, you’re wasting your time pretending to be someone you’re not just to get attention from girls.”
I sit back, shaking off the twinging nerve. “Girls don’t bother with nerds.”
“Any girl that would reject you because of your intelligence isn’t worth the effort.”
“I beg to differ.” I laugh. “In my experience, the fun ones care way more about brawn over brains.”
“Is that all you care about?” she asks. “What tomorrow’s one-night stand thinks about your washboard abs?”
“Yes.”
“You don’t have to be a big, dumb jo
ck to get laid, John. You should just be yourself.”
I laugh even harder, though I don’t mean to. This entire thing has completely derailed from what I planned. Might as well check out and move on now. Rose Hawthorne is officially off the table.
I pull my backpack off the floor as I stand. “Yeah, maybe I’ll try reciting the Periodic Table at the next party I go to; see how many pairs of panties get tossed my way.”
Rose furrows her brow and shakes her head as I step toward the door. “That’s a real shame,” she says, “because there are plenty of girls out there that would be interested in a guy like that.”
I pause in the doorway, sensing opportunity. “Like who?”
“Like…” She hesitates and looks down, hiding the blood in her face again. “I don’t know. It doesn’t matter.”
“Like who, Ms. Hawthorne?”
“I hope you found this helpful,” she says. “I’ll see you in class.”
I grab the door and push it closed, making her jump in her chair. “Stand up,” I tell her.
Her chest heaves beneath her cardigan.
“I said, stand up.”
“John…” She takes a deep, calming breath. “I think the two of us need to establish a few boundaries here—”
I take a wide step toward the desk and she jumps out of her chair.
“John, stop.”
“Why?” I ask. “You obviously don’t want me to.”
“That’s not true,” she says, her voice breaking. “Even if it were, what you’re doing is very inappropriate.”
I take another step around the desk. “I know.”
She moves in the opposite direction. “If you know, then you should stop.”
“No.”
We circle the desk, staying on opposite ends the whole time we move.
Her eyes shift toward the closed door. “Please don’t do this here.”
I raise a brow. “Do what exactly?”
“Whatever it is you’re trying to do right now.”
“I’d be happy to meet up with you somewhere else…”
“That’s not what I mean.”
The Bad Baller Collection Page 26